A history of the renewal of the corneal epithelium : a 3D animation

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_B53C2512E676
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
A history of the renewal of the corneal epithelium : a 3D animation
Title of the conference
Investigative ophthalmology and visual science
Author(s)
Majo F., Clavien M., Lucciola A., Lucciola E., Thalmann D.
Organization
ARVO E-Abstract 1777
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
50
Language
english
Abstract
Background: To compare the different schemes that have been proposed during the last thirteen years to explain the renewal of the corneal epithelium.
Material and Methods:We analyzed all the data present in the literature to explain the renewal of the corneal epithelium in mammals. According to the schemes proposed in the literature we developed a 3D animation to facilitate the understanding of the different concepts.
Results:Three different schemes have been proposed to explain the renewal of the corneal epithelium in mammals during the last thirteen years. 1950-1981: the corneal epithelium was thought being renewed by mitosis of cells located in the basal layer. At this time scientist were not talking about stem cells. 1981-1986 was the period of the "XYZ hypothesis" or the transdifferentiation paradigm. At this time the conjunctival epithelium renewed the corneal epithelium in a centripetal migration. 1986-2008: the limbal stem cell paradigm, there were no stem cells in the corneal epithelium, all the corneal stem cells were located in the limbus and renewed the central cornea after a migration of 6 to 7 mm of transient amplifying cells toward the centre of the cornea. 2008, epithelial stem cells were found in the central cornea in mammals (Nature, Majo et al. November 2008).
Discussion:We thought that the renewal of the corneal epithelium was completely defined. According to the last results we published in Nature, the current paradigm will be revisited. The experiments we made were on animals and the final demonstration on human has still to be done. If we find the same results in human, a new paradigm will be define and will change the way we consider ocular surface therapy and reconstruction.
Create date
06/02/2010 17:53
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:23
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